I fondly remember the pass through Dallas on our way to Mexico.
--Beau Mon, 16 Jan 2006 09:20:46 -0500
Yeah, that's the trip I was thinking of, though its been kind of overshadowed by a trip I took a few years ago.
Actually I have a lot of memories from that original trip, just not much about Dallas.
--Kirk Mon, 16 Jan 2006 10:53:58 -0500
Jeff S. and I left early from that trip and had to spend the night in Dallas by ourselves. That was awesome for a couple of kids.
On the way down through Dallas I felt like sheep being herded through the airport.
--Beau Mon, 16 Jan 2006 11:08:21 -0500
Love this photo dude:
http://alienbill.com/photos/album/02.midschooltofreshman/?view=29Actually just the other day I was cleaning and found the yellow-covered, red-binding tourbooks we were all given...
--Kirk Mon, 16 Jan 2006 11:16:51 -0500
I have never been to Dallas. Damn.
My mother's particularly fond of that goldfish thing, too. It reminds me of 'the *other* phonetic alphabet'
A for an 'orse
B for ham?
C for miles
etc etc etc.....
--Catherine Mon, 16 Jan 2006 12:24:44 -0500
Huh? I can kind of sort see the first one but besides that...
--Kirk Mon, 16 Jan 2006 12:47:56 -0500
Oh, I kind of get it.
Like there could be a
F ter ham
or something...
--Kirk Mon, 16 Jan 2006 14:36:17 -0500
Even better...
http://www.aldertons.com/co_alph.htmI was reading the first one wrong, I thought it was A for "AN 'orse"
--Kirk Mon, 16 Jan 2006 14:38:50 -0500
Just in case others haven't got it -
Hay for an 'orse
Beef or ham
See for miles
and so on. It helps if you think of them in a Cockney accent. And not some terrible Dick Van Dyke Mawy Pawpins one, either!
--Catherine Mon, 16 Jan 2006 19:39:56 -0500